Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 June 1937 — Page 40
FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1937
This Pair Tired of ‘Gangster Roles
These youn men. are fed up on being stopped by “police every jime the Brady gang robs a bank. It wasn’t so bag for a while but the last time they ran into an army of officers armed with machine guns, rifles and automatic pistols. The reason is ‘that the aut@mobile license plates used by Brady were stolen last December from Clayton Daugherty
used in a bank
(left) and he later received duplicate plates. that time the stolen plates were seen on the car
Since
holdup at Farmland. Daughterty
has asked that license plates bearing different numbers be issued to him. Jay Harshman (right) has: been his companion on several trips when they were stopped by officers.
ton failed to see the removed culyous, In an attempt to avert the Mr. Starrett stayed in the road, signaling until hit by the au-
CHILD DIES, 7 HURT IN AUTO'S ITO'S PLUNGE =e had left a field in
| which he was working to drive his ! wife, two children and three neigh- , bors to ‘Jeritho, four miles distant.
COAL OPERATORS IN Bose June 4.—Mildred | STATE TO ORGANIZE:
Walton, 5-yé:r-old daughter of Mr. | Times Special and Mrs. Lolinie Walton, was killed | WASHINGTON, June 4—Indiana
and seven ofhers were injured when | | coal operators will organize under an au.omokiile driven by the vic-|the new law at a meeting to be held tim’s fatheridived into an eight-foot |at Terre Haute, June 23, the NaBAKING
ditch near here yesterday. | c CHICKENS 1 be
waite injured were Mr. and Mrs. Plenty of Frys—All Kinds
alton, the latter probably fatalWEST ST.
We their son) ' Robert, 9; Mrs. George Temple, 49! her daughter, Mrs. POULTRY CO. 11 N. West LI-0592. /
Madge Cook, 30; Mrs. Cook’s son, Free Dressing Free Delivery
Driver’s Daughter Victim in Downstate | Accident
~
‘Roasting and
Howard, 8, 2nd Bryan Starrett, 43, acting district ;goad superintendent. The car bide into the ditch at the bottom a hill where a culvert bridge had been removed by a érew in charge of the latter. Despite his frantic signaling, Mr. Wal--
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tional Bituminous Coal Commission announced today. Jonas Waffle, acting director for the 11th District, will -be in charge. All district operators will be notified and given an opportunity to qualify as code members, it was said.
CLOSED COUNTY BANK PAYS OUT FULL DEPOSITS
Stockholders Receive $150 For Each $100 in Court Liquidation Order.
Petition to pay another 10 per cent dividend to Cumberland Bank depositors is to be filed in Superior Court 2 within the next few days, Carl Ploch, liqudating agent, announced today. Meanwhile, a record in the history of Marion County bank liquidations was set when State Bank of Massachusetts = Avenue depositors were paid 100 cents on the dollar and stockholders $130 on every $100 by Superior Court Judge Joseph T. Markey. The proposed Cumberland Bank depositors dividend is expected to amount to approximately $6800, and to bring the total paid back to depositors since the bank closed Aug. 15, 1936, to 65 per cent.
Suit Filed Recently
Former Cumberland Bank officers receritly filed suit in Circuit Court asking that the bank’s assets be taken away from the State Financial Institutions Department and returned to them for appointment of a receiver. The suit contended State liquidating agents had mismanaged the assets. Terming the suit a “cowardly act,” Judge Markey, in whose court this liquidation is pending, criticized the conduct of the former officers. Circuit Court Judge Earl R. Cox then ordered this suit
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PAGE 39
transferred to court. The Massachusetts Avenue Bank was closed voluntarily by ‘directors on Feb. 15. The dividend ordered on the Massachusetts Avenue bank yesterday is only a partial one, according to Judge Markey, and another is to be paid later. The current stockholdsers dividend is $37,500 for $25,000 worth of par value Stock outstanding as of June 1.
Judge | Markey’s
FIRE DESTROYS BARN
A fire of unknown | origin destroyed a two-story barn in the rear of 1022 S. Capitol Ave. today. The barn was the propery of Mrs. Pauline Aldoher.
Seeing Is Believing A look at our windows and ‘a visit into our store will convince you that we sell
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So, Daniel Boone, you can’t | take your afternoon nap without a loaded rifle by your side?
Ves, we know you're tire. of playing Puritan. But it’s the chance of our life to get your hands washed,
No, we don’t mind your joining King Arthur's court. It’s just that you had to dress up in the only can there’ s a
deposit a on.
There's fio holding Jasper down. Frank Owen, who presents Jasper in a daily comic cartoon, found that out some time ago. So he lets Jasper have his way—and so lets everybody who reads Jasper have an oversize laugh every day. He's “an imp of impulse, Jasper is. You can't count on what his next move or mood will be. But you can count on its being funny. You'll be seeing Jasper
Munilay, June 7th
E INDIANAPOLIS TIES
economy and a collectivist. economy.” He criticized John L. Lewis, chairman of the C. I. O. and predicted the Wagner Labor Relations Act
RAGKET PERI | IN WAGNER LAW
would produce the same sort of “gansterism, racketeering and great ack} that followed the Volstead Act.”
Bey United Press NEW YORK, June 4.—Delegates #0 the Congress of American Private ‘Enterprise, called by the New York State Economic Council to defend the capitalistic system, heard speakers ‘denounce the New Deal, the Committee for Industrial Organization and the alleged trend toward “collectivist economy.” George E. Sokolsky, one-time radical, told the Congress “we are in a struggle between a capitalistic
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